1 Euealyptus.] XLVIII. MYRTACER. | 233 
dt 2 ft. Leaves mostly opposite, although petiolate, from broadly . 
f ovate to Seen very obtuse or rarely acute, 3 to 5 in. long, very 
thick and rigid, the veins diverging and parallel but not close, the marginal 
.. with parallel distinct tells Disk broad and concave, the se" with as many 
_ protuberances in the centre as valves. ` Fruit very ue: and shining, broadly 
turbinate or hemispherical, 1 to 1$ in. diameter, the flat or concave, the 
nm fully 3 lines diameter, the capsule slightly depressed, the valves o? . or 
rarely 6) usually flat.—Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4266; F. Muell. Fragm. ii 
E. plurilocularis, F. Muell. Fragm. ii. 70. -< 
- Australia. the Kalgan river to Cape Riche, Preiss, x. 239, Drummond, 
MS x 03, = r E 
GR ma een i not well grown, much less widen 
Tre tr hn "E E 
; i t S 
DN by him E pachypoda, the leaves are acute a a MEE 8 ECK but the pedun- 
Te is very thick and scarcely flattened, bearin ng more than 3 flowers, with ovoid calyxes, 
"eg not J* fruited, but it will probably not a specifically distinct from 
— IV. Cornura.—Peduncles axillary or lateral, several-, often 
many-flowered, flattened (except in E cornuta). Flowers sessile or shortly 
pedicellate, Opereulum long, smooth, and not thick. Stamens erect or 
lexuose in the bud, not inflected. Fruit turbinate, urceolate or obovoid, the 
Co not much sunk. Leaves thick, with irregular oblique veins, often in- 
icuous, 
Re -Le ehmanni, Preiss, Herb. according to Schau. in Pl. Preiss. i. 127. 
CINE or «mall tre, with a roughish reddish bark coming off in irregular 
(Oldfield). Lea s from ovate to oblong or almost lanceolate, obtuse, 
int ." ong, very thi ck, the veins very oblique and rather distant, the 
Tamarginal one at a distance from the edge. Flowers several, often 20 or 
le 
: x a in. long. Stamen s 13 to 2 in. ed arcet in the bud as in Æ. cor- 
py Ue Persistent base of the Lehmanni, ‘Schau. in 
Thr. style.— Symph et ma 
d 1. 127 ; E macrocera, Turez. “in Bull Mose. 1849, ii. 20 (de- 
. — apparently from an imperfect. specimen). 
